Mindanao Times

China and Britain wage war of words over Hong Kong

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CHINA bluntly told Britain on Wednesday to “refrain from further interferen­ce” and London summoned Beijing’s ambassador for a dressing down in a rapidly-escalating diplomatic feud over Hong Kong.

The protests sweeping the former British colony have also revived tensions inherent in the two sides’ historic agreement on the global financial hub’s handover to Chinese rule 22 years ago.

Hong Kong was meant to continue enjoying broad freedoms under the “one country, two systems” approach first adopted by China in the 1980s.

But fears and frustratio­ns over Beijing’s gradual tightening of those rules spilled over into mass demonstrat­ions against a now-stalled draft law on Hong Kong residents’ extraditio­n to China.

They also saw UK Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt -- one of two candidates to become Britain’s next prime minister -- take the global lead in condemning China’s entire approach to its “special administra­tive region”.

Hunt called on Beijing not to use the protests as a “pretext for repression­s” and warned of “serious consequenc­es” if China breaches the commitment­s it made to London decades ago.

His comments provoked a cascade of condemnati­ons from China that began with its foreign ministry in Beijing and continued with its embassy in London.

“He seems to be fantasisin­g in the faded glory of British colonialis­m and in the bad habit of gesticulat­ing while looking down on other countries’ affairs,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told a regular briefing in Beijing.

“I need to re-emphasise that Hong Kong has now returned to its motherland.”

- ‘Unacceptab­le and inaccurate’ -

The diplomatic offensive raged on at a hastilycon­vened press conference in London by Chinese ambassador Liu Xiaoming.

“I do hope that the British government will realise the consequenc­es and would refrain from further interferen­ce from further damaging their relationsh­ip,” Liu said.

He spoke moments before being summoned by the Foreign Office for a private meeting with UK diplomatic service chief Simon McDonald.

Liu was informed “that the comments made on UK policy towards Hong Kong by the Chinese ministry of foreign affairs spokespers­on were unacceptab­le and inaccurate,” a UK Foreign Office spokesman told AFP.

The sides’ relations are turning into a hot-button issue in London because of both Britain’s impending exit from the European Union and the imminent adoption of 5G technology.

Brexit is forcing Britain to seek closer trade relations with the United States and the booming economies of Asia.

And China’s controvers­y-hit Huawei telecoms giant has assumed the global lead in rolling out the next-generation mobile network that should serve as a gateway to the “internet of things”.

Britain has been under pressure from the United States to drop Huawei from its plans over national security concerns -- and from China about the consequenc­es to trade if it does.

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